membranprotein
Membranprotein, also known as membrane protein, is a protein that interacts with biological membranes. They can be integral (intrinsic) proteins embedded within the lipid bilayer, often spanning the membrane with one or more transmembrane segments; or peripheral (extrinsic) proteins attached to the membrane surface by electrostatic interactions or through covalent lipid anchors. Some proteins are monotopic, associating with only one side of the bilayer, while lipid-anchored proteins are tethered to the membrane by covalently attached lipid molecules.
Structure and topology: Integral proteins typically contain hydrophobic transmembrane domains forming alpha-helices or beta-barrels that create
Functions: Membrane proteins mediate transport of ions and small molecules (channels and carriers), catalyze membrane-associated reactions
Examples: Aquaporins (water channels), voltage-gated ion channels, solute carriers, the Na+/K+-ATPase, G protein-coupled receptors, and cytochrome
Study and challenges: Structural characterization often uses X-ray crystallography, cryo-EM, or NMR, with detergents, liposomes, or
See also: UniProt membrane protein entries, Pfam membrane protein families, membrane proteomics.